Milwaukee Police Chief Ed Flynn said he would not confirm the name the Hamilton family gave, and the district attorney said the name will be in the report once a decision is made on whether the officer will face criminal charges in the fatal shooting.

Nate Hamilton and others asked the Fire and Police Commission again to publicly release the name of the officer who shot and killed his brother.

"They showed us pictures of this man who accused my brother of hitting him with a baton. I asked District Attorney Chisholm, 'Did he see any marks on this man?' Do you know what he stated? 'No,'" Nate Hamilton said.

"I buried my son on my birthday. Why? Answer me. If takes eight hours of the money that the community pays you to make a decision. Make the right decision. We're hurting," Maria Hamilton said.

The meeting ended in protest.

"No justice, no compromise, no justice, no compromise," the protesters chanted.

The commission and Flynn listened but did not immediately respond to the criticism that it's taking too long for answers in the shooting:

After the meeting, Flynn spoke with reporters.

"The state investigation is in the hands of the decision-making official. That's our district attorney, and I know he's taking time and trouble to try to get this right. And I've maintained all along that I'd rather have a deliberative decision than a fast one," Flynn said.

Protesters called for Flynn's resignation.

The District Attorney's Office said it won't make a decision on whether to charge the officer until it gets the opinion of an independent investigator on the use of force carried out by the officer. That decision could still be weeks away.